The Denver Post

Boulder wooden charcoal grill startup raises $ 7 million

- By Lily O’neill Businessde­n

After living in Kenya for a couple of years, Ben West fell in love with cooking with wooden charcoal.

And when he moved back to his hometown of Portland, Ore., in 2015 an idea sparked in his mind.

“I saw there was this renaissanc­e of going back to wooden charcoal in restaurant­s across the country, and I really wanted to continue cooking that way myself,”

West said. “But I learned that 80% of grill outs are with propane even though people know that cooking with wooden charcoal tastes a lot better.”

In 2017, he started developing Spark Grills, a high- tech charcoal grill that marries the flavor of charcoal with the convenienc­e of gas.

West, now 41, spent three years building the grill. With a team of biomass and food scientists, he developed custom wood and charcoal briquettes that ignite instantly with the turn of a switch — no lighter fluid necessary — and get hot enough for grilling in just a few minutes.

The entreprene­ur moved the company to Boulder in 2019 and put the grill on the market in the summer of 2020.

“I had known Boulder as the Silicon Valley for food. So, I thought it would be a much better place for us for the long- term,” West said.

Last month, the startup garnered $ 7 million out of a $ 12.5 million capital raise with participat­ion from Boulderbas­ed Caruso Ventures and New York- based Lerer Hippeau. West said he plans to use the funds to enhance marketing efforts, invest in product developmen­t and ramp up production for the upcoming grilling season.

This brings the company’s total raised to $ 25 million, West said.

The Spark Grill, which ranges from 250 to 900 degrees Fahrenheit, retails for a base price of $ 1,100 and has an easy turn dial, cast iron grill gates, electric ignition and no ashy mess.

“The data we’ve collected from our app shows that Spark customers are grilling twice as much as the industry average, around 55 times a year, or a little more than once a week.”

It can fit about 12 burgers and can be connected via Bluetooth to the Spark Grills app, which monitors grill and cooking temperatur­es. The grill comes with three charcoal briquettes, a cutting board, temperatur­e probes and a 15- foot power cord.

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